1. You only pull a gun if you are going to use it.
2. After you pull the gun you empty the clip, reload.
Drawing a gun is not for warning nor intimidation.
Well, sometimes its to show the gun to a friend....
I traveled for a living for 30+ years. Millions of road miles as an outside salesman. 2 times I had to produce a gun, never had to use it.
Neither was a dispute, but a clear threat. Both times it ended quickly.
What you wrote is ridiculous. The vast majority of successful defensive uses of guns do not involve shots being fired.
One should not pull a gun unless one is PREPARED to fire it, if necessary, but it is often not necessary. Assuming that pulling the gun will end the threat is foolish, but so is assuming it won’t.
From a legal perspective one should never pull a gun unless he/she reasonably believes he may need to fire it in defense of self or others, though.
Magazine...empty magazine. Reload.
Not clip.
1. You only pull a gun if you are going to use it.
2. After you pull the gun you empty the clip, reload.
Drawing a gun is not for warning nor intimidation.
So if a guy’s coming at you with a baseball bat, saying he’s going to knock your head off, you either:
1. Draw your gun and kill him.
or
2. Don’t draw your gun and let him tee off on your head.
Wouldn’t a better choice be to draw your gun, tell him to drop the bat and get on the ground until the police get here.
Or would that be too much warning and intimidation for you?